Sans Normal Beduz 18 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: code, ui, terminal, tables, labels, utilitarian, technical, neutral, typewriter, alignment, legibility, system text, clarity, geometric, boxy, uniform, clean, minimal.
A monospaced sans with uniform stroke weight, square-ended terminals, and a crisp, grid-friendly rhythm. Curves are simplified into rounded-rect forms (notably in C, G, O, and e), while diagonals stay straight and unmodulated (V, W, X, Y). Proportions are compact and consistent, with open counters and a straightforward, constructed feel. The lowercase uses single-storey forms where expected (a, g), and the overall spacing reads even and predictable in continuous text.
Well suited to coding environments, terminal-style interfaces, and any layout that benefits from fixed character widths such as tables, forms, and data readouts. It also works for labels, captions, and technical documentation where consistent alignment and legibility are priorities.
The font conveys a practical, tool-like tone—clear, matter-of-fact, and mildly retro in a typewriter/terminal way. Its steady cadence and restrained shapes feel engineered rather than expressive, favoring clarity and consistency over personality.
The design appears intended for dependable, alignment-critical typography with a clean sans construction and minimal stylistic interference. Its simplified geometry and consistent metrics suggest a focus on practical readability in structured, information-dense settings.
Distinctive cues include a slashed zero, a simple, functional figure set, and a small dot on i/j that stays crisp at text sizes. The uppercase set looks especially stable and architectural due to flat terminals and squared curves, reinforcing a precise, systems-oriented impression.